Read Don't Read in the Closet: Volume Four Online
Authors: Various Authors
Tags: #Don't Read in the Closet, #mm romance, #gay
selected, too…”
Mr. Supernat scanned it. “Military, special forces, Master’s in
math and engineering… Perfect. Thank you, Jas.”
“No problem.” She gave a wave as he walked away, Reynolds’
resume in hand.
Her inbox’s alarm went off. She had lunch scheduled
with Saul. Saul was better with names. Maybe he’d know why Major
Patrick Reynolds’ sounded so familiar.
THE END
Again
Author bio:
Ryan Loveless has a B.A. in English from a private
college in Illinois and a master’s degree in library and information
science with an archival certificate from a university in New York.
Raised in a conservative family, she was shocked and relieved when
her coming out was largely uneventful. She has been writing since she
could read and has always drifted towards M/M because she enjoyed
Don’t Read in the Closet – volume four 469
the relationship dynamics. It’s possible that her first story was about
G.I. Joe. She wishes she still had that story.
Also from Ryan Loveless
Available at Silver Publishing:
Pop Life
Available at Dreamspinner Press:
Off the Page
Offside
The Gift
Uniform Appeal Anthology
Available at Smashwords and Lulu:
Building Arcadia (Blueprints Not Included)
Email: [email protected]
Faceboo
k: http://facebook.com/ryanlovelessbooks
Blog
: http://ryanloveless.dreamwidth.org/
Twitter
: http://www.twitter.com/ryanloveless
Don’t Read in the Closet – volume four 470
Selah March – THE SATYR’S LAMENT (Post-Apocalyptic/ Mythology)
Genre:
erotic post-apocalyptic fantasy
Tags:
outdoor sex, virgin sex, gladiator,
Greek/Roman mythology, pushy bottom
This fine, fine specimen
Content warning:
non-sexual violence and
caught my eye.
gore
[PHOTO: A toned,
Words:
4,511
muscular, kilted man leans
back against a wall. His
THE SATYR’S LAMENT
dark-haired head is tilted,
enhancing the sharp angle
by Selah March
of stubbled jaw, the half-
This was not how Cato was meant to die.
lidded eyes, the hip-thrust
stance. A tattoo marks his
He was meant to die as a hero on the
bicep, a dangling cross
battlefield, or in the forest as the meal of a
draws attention to his bare
chest, the slitted dark fabric
hungry predator, or even as an old man in the
reveals one strong thigh.]
bosom of his loving family. But not like this —
What I want to know is…
never
like this.
Warrior or cosplayer?
He lay on his back in the dust. The sky
Bad boy or playboy?
above the coliseum glowed white as bone and
Angsty or shy?
bright as a freshly sharpened blade, dazzling his
Defiant or stubborn?
eyes. The roar of the crowd filled his ears, and
he could smell his own blood and that of other
Whatever the answers are,
he looks awfully alone
men, and over it the rank stench of the
there. Can you find him a
Holocaust Machine — dirty oil, spilled
pair and make him happy?
gasoline, and burning flesh.
Thank you!
He shifted, jarring the jagged piece of steel
LadyM
that protruded from between his ribs and
sending a bolt of agony down the length of his
body. He gripped the mechanical monster’s
broken claw between his numb fingers and
pulled. It came away in his hand — all six
inches of it. A fresh gout of blood flowed from
the hole it left.
Don’t Read in the Closet – volume four 471
The clanging and grinding of gears alerted him to the Holocaust
Machine’s second approach, and he struggled to prop himself on one
elbow. Around him, men in caught in the process of dying flinched
away from the sound, but Cato would face the instrument of his
destruction.
The beast stopped a few yards away. It stood twenty feet high and
fifteen feet across, its pitted carcass a wonder of ugliness and ferocity.
Once a fearsome war machine, it was now relegated to slaughtering
expendables for the entertainment of the high and mighty. Cato
wondered if it comprehended how far it had fallen.
The beast opened its maw with an echoing screech to reveal its
deadly, gore-splattered teeth and the charred remains of Cato’s fellow
gladiators. Rage filled Cato’s heart — hot and pure, but no less
pointless for its intensity — and he pushed himself further upright.
“Come on, chow down already! I’ll give you a bellyache like the
end of the fucking world, you rusty bastard!”
The beast tilted its spiked head, reminding Cato of a quizzical dog.
Then one of its dozen arms shot out. Its claws closed around Cato and
lifted him into the dry, dusty air. The spectators in the stands shrieked
their approval.
The ground tilted dizzily beneath Cato as he was upended. When
he closed his eyes, he saw the forest grove where he and his father had
once hunted. He found himself murmuring the words to an old prayer
from his childhood — an irony of the highest order, as he no longer
believed in any version of heaven, which was how he’d ended up as
fodder for the Holocaust Machine in the first place. Still, the words
came to him couched in his mother’s voice as if she were bending to
kiss him, as she had every night till he was fifteen and the warrior
monks of the Sacred Union invaded his home and snatched him away.
To the spirits of the grove I offer my allegiance. I pray they will
guide me safely to my home in the bower, where I may spend eternity
in peace and plenty.
Don’t Read in the Closet – volume four 472
But Cato would never live in peace and plenty again. He bit back
a curse as the beast’s fiery breath scorched the exposed skin of his
chest and caught at the wool of his kilt, making it smoke. He could
feel blood running like water from his wound, and wondered if he
might bleed out before the Machine incinerated him. It was the best
hope he could muster.
He closed his eyes in resignation and prepared himself to die.
All at once, the chants and jeers of the crowd faded, replaced
by…birdsong? And why did the beast’s breath blow cooler now, and
was that the sound of rushing water? Cato opened his eyes, shouted in
alarm…
…and fell from the branches of a cottonwood tree onto soft, green
grass.
****
the ground with a thud and a groan. He waited as the human got its
bearings — looked around, rubbed at its eyes, checked itself for
nonexistent wounds. When it stood and shook the cinders from its
skin, Silvanus stepped from behind the mulberry bush and into the
dappled sunshine.
“You are even more beautiful at this distance. It is quite
remarkable.”
The statement was nothing short of the truth. The human was
stunning — an artful combination of pale skin, shaggy black hair, and
cobalt blue eyes. Though its ribs showed too well beneath its short
cape, and its kilt hung too low on its hips, Silvanus could see that with
proper nutrition it would be a strapping example of its species.
At the sound of Silvanus’ voice, the human jumped and stumbled
backward. When it turned to face Silvanus, its hands were already
reaching for its blade, though the cut of the human’s sharp glance was
weapon enough for any three of its kind.
Don’t Read in the Closet – volume four 473
“Who…who are you?” it asked, its voice rough as bark and pitched
low beneath the babble of the brook.
“I have many names. You may call me Silvanus.”
“What is this place? How did I get here?”
Silvanus chose to ignore the first question. “I willed your
presence.”
“Willed it? Like…with magic?” the human asked, his tone even
more distrustful. “Are you a sorcerer?”
Again, Silvanus chose not to answer directly. “In your final
extremity, you prayed to the spirit of the grove, did you not?”
The human nodded. “I remember.”
“I merely answered your plea,” Silvanus explained. “This is your
new home in the bower, where you may spend eternity in peace and
plenty.” He took a single step forward. “And pleasant
companionship.”
The human shuffled backward. “This is a dream. The guards put
something in my tea, and I’m hallucinating.” It rubbed at its eyes
again, and ran its hands through its shaggy, black hair. “They do that,
you know. They get bored and fuck with our minds while we’re
waiting to be fed to the Machine.”
Silvanus shook his head. “I know nothing of your guards, but this
is no dream.”
The human gave him another cutting look. “You know, it’s hard
to take you seriously when you’re standing there naked.”
Silvanus glanced down at the glory that was his body and
shrugged. “There is no need to cover oneself here. The sun will not
burn, the wind will not freeze. The rain is warm and gentle, and seeks
only to quench our thirst.”
He sidled nearer as he spoke, scuffing his feet in the grass.
Don’t Read in the Closet – volume four 474
The human took another step backward. “All right, Nature Boy,
that’s close enough.”
Silvanus inclined his head. “As you like. We have all eternity to
know one another.”
“All eternity? You mean this is it for me? Forever?”
“It was your dying wish.”
The human scowled. “I was under duress. You shouldn’t take a
man literally when he’s about to barbecued.”
“Barbecued?” The word was unfamiliar to Silvanus, but he did
like the way the human’s lips pursed in aggravation.
“Never mind,” the human replied. “Where’s the exit?”
“Exit?” A flutter of panic erupted in Silvanus’ chest. “You wish to
leave this place?”
The human shrugged. “I’m not in the habit of abandoning my
buddies. They’re getting massacred in the arena.”
“And how would your instant demise help them, exactly?”
Silvanus inquired, doing his best to seem non-threatening.
“Call it a point of honor.” The human seemed less intimidated
than impatient. “Seriously, how do I get back to the coliseum?”
Silvanus thought a moment. “Will you give me your ear,
courageous human, for but a few moments? Allow me to tell you of
this place, and all its beauties. Allow me to show you what you would
so readily trade away for the privilege of being…barbecued.”
“But my buddies—”
“Time moves differently here. What seems like hours will
encompass but a moment or two on the human plane.”
He watched as the human considered his request.
Finally, it nodded. “I’ll listen, but you can’t keep calling me
‘human.’ My name is Cato.”
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